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Transcript
Development 102, 55-63 (1988)
Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1988
55
Intercellular communication in the early embryo of the ascidian
Ciona intestinalis
F. SERRAS1, C. BAUD2, M. MOREAU3, P. GUERRIER3 and J. A. M. VAN DEN BIGGELAAR1
'Department of Experimental Zoology, University of Utrecht, Padualaan 8, 3584 CH Utrecht, The Netherlands
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moleculaire, CNRS, 91190 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
3
Station Biologique, 29211 Roscoff, France
2
Summary
We have studied the intercellular communication
pathways in early embryos of the ascidian Ciona
intestinalis. In two different series of experiments, we
injected iontophoretically the dyes Lucifer Yellow and
Fluorescein Complexon, and we analysed the spread
of fluorescence to the neighbouring cells. We found
that before the 32-cell stage no dye spread occurs
between nonsister cells, whereas sister cells are dyecoupled, possibly via cytoplasmic bridges. After the
32-cell stage, dye spread occurs throughout the
embryo. However, electrophysiological experiments
showed that nonsister cells are ionically coupled before
the 32-cell stage. We also found that at the 4-cell stage
junctional conductance between nonsister cells is
voltage dependent, which suggests that conductance is
mediated by gap junctions in a way similar to that
observed in other embryos.
Introduction
In the mouse embryo, analysis of intercellular
communication by dye transfer and electrical coupling has shown that the blastomeres become coupled
shortly after the embryo has reached the 8-cell stage
(Lo & Gilula, 1979a). After implantation, the cells of
the inner cell mass do not transfer dye to the
trophectoderm cells, although they are still electrically coupled (Lo & Gilula, 1979b). These experiments demonstrate that intercellular communication
is strictly regulated during development. It has been
suggested that such a regulation may be important in
embryos with 'regulative' development (Lo, 1985).
However, recently it has been reported that intercellular communication may also be significant for the
development of mosaic systems like the molluscs
Patella (Serras etal. 1985) and Lymnaea (Serras & Van
den Biggelaar, 1987).
In the present study, we have investigated intercellular communication in the early ascidian embryo,
which displays a highly mosaic development. Ascidian embryos are well suited for the study of
morphogenesis and differentiation because there is
an obvious relationship between the segregation of
Cells of most animal tissues are able to communicate
through low-resistance channels known as gap junctions (Furshpan & Potter, 1959), which allow the flux
of molecules up to 2nm in diameter (Pitts & Simms,
1977; Simpson et al 1977; Schwarzmann et al 1981).
These channels provide an intercellular pathway for
the exchange of ions and metabolites needed for
the coordination of cellular activities (Pitts, 1980;
Loewenstein, 1981).
Gap-junctional communication has also been described in embryos of many vertebrates and invertebrates (see Caveney, 1985 for review). Gap junctions occur very early in development, suggesting that
junctional communication mediates the cell-to-cell
transfer of regulatory signals involved in the control
of development (Potter et al. 1966). Furthermore, in
the amphibian and mouse embryos it has been
demonstrated that morphogenesis can be severely
disturbed when intercellular communication is prevented by injection of antibodies to gap-junctional
protein (Warner et al. 1984; Warner, 1987).
Key words: ascidians, intercellular communication,
junctions, Ciona intestinalis.
56
F. Serras, C. Baud, M. Moreau, P. Guerrier and J. A. M. van den Biggelaar
cytoplasmic determinants and the differentiation of
specific cell lines (Reverberi, 1971; Whittaker, 1979).
Moreover, the rigidly determinative cleavage pattern
has permitted detailed cell lineage work which allows
the origin of different adult or larval structures to be
traced back (Conklin, 1905; Reverberi, 1971; Ortolani, 1955; Nishida & Satoh, 1983; Nishida & Satoh,
1985; Zalokar & Sardet, 1984). Ionic coupling up to
the 8-cell stage has been reported in Ciona intestinalis
and Ascidia malaca (Dale et al. 1982), but changes of
cell coupling through early development have not
been documented so far. In this paper, we report on
intercellular communication in embryos of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis between the 2- and 32-cell
stages, using both electrotonic and dye-coupling techniques.
Materials and methods
All experiments were performed at the Station Biologique
in Roscoff. Adult animals of Ciona intestinalis were obtained from Morgat and Roscoff (Bretagne, France), and
kept in tanks with running sea water. Fertilization was done
artificially. Adult animals were opened and sperm and eggs
sucked from gono- and spermioduct with a Pasteur pipette.
For each fertilization, freshly collected sperm and eggs
from three different animals were mixed. Sperm was used
directly from the spermioduct without any previous dilution; no sign of polyspermy was ever detected. Under
these conditions, 90-95 % of the eggs were successfully
fertilized and developed normally.
In order to remove the mucus around the follicular cells,
protease (0-05%) was applied during 30-45 s. This treatment did not affect normal development and facilitated the
manipulation of the embryos. All impalements for dyeinjection and most for electrical recordings were performed
without removing the follicle and test cells. Since these cells
are transparent, orientation of the embryos and identification of the cells were easy. The test cells are normally not
pigmented. In some cases, they showed a slight autofluorescence (see Fig. 2F), which, however, could not be
confused with the fluorescence of the dye inside the
blastomeres.
Dye iontophoresis
Microelectrodes were made from glass capillaries containing a microfilament (GC150-TF, Clark Electromedical
Instruments, Pangbourne, UK). They had a resistance of
about 10 MQ when filled with 3M-KC1. The tip was backfilled with a 3 % aqueous solution of the lithium salt of
Lucifer Yellow CH (Sigma, St Louis, MO). The remainder
of the microelectrode was filled with 3M-LiCI. In a second
series of experiments, the dye Fluorescein Complexon
(Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, NY) was used in a 3 %
aqueous solution; the rest of the microelectrode was then
filled with I M - K C I .
The embryos were positioned under a stereomicroscope;
the dye-filled microelectrode was brought to the surface of
the embryo by a micromanipulator (Microcontrole, Saint
Guenault, Evry, France) and impaled into the desired
blastomere. Rectangular hyperpolarizing current pulses
(duration 0-2-0-3 s; amplitude 5nA) were applied at intervals of 2-4s during 90s. In the cases where a restricted
diffusion of dye in the embryo was observed (the stages
before dye spread begins), the time of iontophoresis was
increased up to 5 min, in order to ensure that restriction of
dye spread was not due to an insufficient amount of dye in
the injected cell. After iontophoresis, the electrode was
removed from the cell and the embryo was transferred to
an epiluminescence fluorescence microscope (excitation:
490-510nm; emission: 520nm; Olympus, BH2, Japan).
Microphotographs were taken on Kodak Ektachrome 400
ASA.
Since our equipment did not allow simultaneous injection
andfluorescencemicroscopy, it was not possible to estimate
the time between the start of iontophoresis and the moment
at which the diffusion of dye became apparent. The average
time needed to transfer the embryo to the fluorescence
microscope was 2min. From then on, subsequent observations were made every 5 min, during 30min. As the
duration of one cell cycle at 20-22cC is approximately
20min, each dye-injected embryo was observed at least
until it reached the next division.
Ionic coupling
Embryos at different stages of development were transferred to the recording chamber in which a slow perfusion
of artificial sea water was maintained. Experiments were
performed at room temperature (20-22°C). In a few
experiments, follicle and test cells were manually removed
before impalement but, in most cases, embryos with intact
envelopes were used. The embryos were impaled and
observed under a stereomicroscope. Two electrode holders
were mounted on micromanipulators (Prior and Co.,
Herts, UK). Microelectrodes were pulled from glass capillaries with filament (Clark GC 150 TF) on a horizontal
puller (BB-CH Mecanex, Geneva, Switzerland) and had a
resistance of 10-20 MQ when filled with 3M-KC1. Grounding was via an Ag/AgCl wire positioned in the chamber. We
used two different amplifiers connected to each electrode.
Both amplifiers could measure the potential and inject a
current through a single electrode. One amplifier (M707,
WPI, New Haven, CT) had a bridge circuit to cancel the
electrode resistance whereas the second one (RK400,
Biologic, Grenoble, France) did not have such a bridge
circuit.
The use of the same microelectrode for injection as well
as for measurement of the potential may lead to errors in
cell-resistance measurements, because the electrode resistance can change to an unknown degree during the experiment. However, this is not a serious problem when
working with embryos of Ciona intestinalis, for two reasons.
First, microelectrodes with a relatively low resistance can
be used, which are less subject to clogging by cellular
particles; second, the input resistance of the embryonic
Cell communication in early Ciona embryos
cells is high (20-100 MQ) and the time constant of the
membrane potential response to a square current pulse is
long (more than 100 ms) as compared to the time constant
of the electrode response (less than 3ms). Therefore, the
two responses can be easily distinguished and the cell input
resistance accurately measured with a single current-injecting microelectrode. Fig. 1 shows the equivalent electrical
circuit, together with a typical set of data from a 16-cell
embryo. The right trace in Fig. IB illustrates the two
different time constants.
57
With the parameters defined in the legend of Fig. 1, two
coupling ratios were calculated:
c2 = v 1 /v 2 .
Input resistances were also calculated as:
Results
i
100ms
Fig. 1. Schematic representation of the experimental set
up for electrotonic coupling measurements. The left and
right insets represent the potential changes recorded in
both cells. In A, a 1 nA current pulse is injected through
the electrode on the left side (electrode 1, with resistance
R^n) into the cell. The current may divide between the
impaled cell and the junctional resistance into the second
cell. The left inset shows the transient voltage (V])
recorded by electrode 1. The electrode resistance has
been electronically cancelled. The right inset shows the
simultaneous voltage shift (V2) recorded in cell 2. In B,
the current pulse is injected through electrode 2 (with
resistance R^u)- Here, the amplifier does not allow
electrode resistance compensation. Therefore, the
transient voltage recorded by electrode 2 on the right first
shows a rapid transient due to electrode resistance, and
then a slower transient (V'2) due to the membrane
resistance. The left inset shows the transient (V^)
recorded by electrode 1. These recordings are from a 16cell-stage embryo in which the two cells are perfectly
coupled. The four traces are drawn on the same scale.
In Ciona embryos, the first cleavage takes place about
50min after fertilization. The plane of cleavage is
meridional and coincides with the plane of bilateral
symmetry of the larva. The blastomeres are of equal
size and according to Conklin's (1905) nomenclature
they are termed AB2 and AB2. The second plane of
cleavage is perpendicular to the first and the resulting
four blastomeres (A3, A3, B3, B3) have the same
size. The third cleavage plane is equatorial and gives
rise to four animal blastomeres (a4.2, a4.2, b4.2,
b4.2) and four vegetal blastomeres (A4.1, A4.1,
B4.1, B4.1). After the fourth and fifth cleavages, the
blastomeres are positioned symmetrically to the right
and left of the first plane of segmentation so that the
embryo consists of two symmetrical halves.
Dye coupling
In the course of 18 experiments, a total of 85 embryos
(Table 1) were successfully impaled in a single cell
and dye iontophoresed.
At the 2-cell stage, when injection was performed
during the first 5-10 min after the first cleavage,
Lucifer Yellow CH spread from the impaled cell to
the other one (Fig. 2A). In contrast, when the injection was performed at the end of the 2-cell stage, no
transfer of dye was detected, as illustrated in Fig. 2B.
Dye injection in 4-, 8- and 16-cell-stage embryos
gave the same results: when Lucifer Yellow was
iontophoresed early after cell division, the sister cell
of the injected cell was also labelled. However, no
spread of Lucifer Yellow CH was detected to nonsister cells. This is illustrated in Fig. 2D-F for an 8-cell
stage. Like at the 2-cell stage, only one cell was
labelled if the injection was performed at the end of a
given stage as illustrated in Fig. 2C for a 4-cell stage.
These results suggest that after each cleavage,
cytoplasmic bridges remain between sister cells; after
about 10 min, these bridges disappear and diffusion of
Lucifer Yellow to neighbouring cells can no longer be
detected. This is similar to what has been described in
mouse embryos up to the 8-cell stage (Lo & Gilula,
1979a).
It should be noticed that at the 16-cell stage, in two
embryos out of ten, dye spread was found to neighbouring cells. In one of these two cases (Fig. 3B) in
58
F. Senas, C. Baud, M. Moreau, P. Guerrier and J. A. M. van den Biggelaar
Table 1. Summary of dye-injection experiments
Dye
Stage
Cases of no spread
or spread to sister
cell only
Cases of spread
to nonsister
cells
2
4
8
16
32
10
15
14
8
-
—
2
22
2
4
8
16
32
2
2
2
3
_
—
5
Lucifer Yellow
Fluorescein
Complexion
which the dye had been injected in a cell at the
vegetal side of the embryo (cell B5.1), spread of dye
was detected to three cells on the same half of the
plane of bilateral symmetry (cells A5.1, A5.2, B5.2)
and to one cell of the other half (B5.1). In the other
case, the cell injected (b5.4) belonged to the animal
side and the dye spread to the symmetrical cell b5.4
and to other cells on the same half as the injected cell
(not illustrated). However, other embryos injected
into the same two cells (B5.1 or b5.4) showed no dye
spread.
After the fifth cleavage (32-cell stage and further),
spread of dye to nonsister cells occurred in all
embryos tested. Fig. 3D-F shows examples of dye
spread to ten or more neighbouring cells. An extensive dye spread was observed when the dye was
injected at the 32-cell stage. However, with the same
dye-iontophoresis conditions, when a single cell was
injected at the 16-cell stage and observed at the 32cell stage, there was no or very little dye spread to
adjacent blastomeres (Fig. 3C). This may be because
the dye may be freely diffusible for a limited period
only and it may gradually bind to cytoplasmic constituents (Stewart, 1978) as has been suggested in
other developing embryos (De Laat et al. 1980;
Dorresteijn et al. 1983).
Dye injections were performed into different animal and vegetal cells. In contrast to the amphibian
embryo (Guthrie, 1984), in the 32-cell-stage Ciona
embryo, the dye always spreads to neighbouring cells
independently of the position of the injected cell. In
some cases, dye spread seemed to be limited to one
half of the embryo, on the injected side (see for
instance Fig. 3F). However, later observations of
these same embryos showed that the dye also spread
towards the other half.
It has been reported recently that dyes with different chemical properties could show distinct dyespread patterns (Fraser & Bryant, 1985). Therefore,
we also used the dye Fluorescein Complexon (Kodak;
MW 618 D) to analyse the patterns of dye coupling in
early Ciona development. We found exactly the same
pattern as with Lucifer Yellow: no dye transfer before
the 32-cell stage and extensive transfer after this stage
(not illustrated).
Ionic coupling
Embryos at different stages of development, between
the 2- and 32-cell stage, were impaled with two
microelectrodes in two different cells. Current pulses
were given alternately through one of the two electrodes and the voltage transients similar to those
shown in Fig. 1 were recorded from both cells for a
few minutes. For the sake of consistency, we
measured all parameters within the first lOmin of
impalement since, in some cases, embryos impaled
for long periods of time divided abnormally. One
reason is probably the osmotic modification brought
about by KC1 leaking out of the electrodes into the
cells.
For each embryo, input resistances (Rl and R2)
and coupling ratios (Cl and C2) were calculated as
described in the Materials and methods section. In
Fig. 4 data from 28 pairs of cells are plotted versus the
number of cells in the embryo. At the 2-cell stage,
coupling ratios vary from one to almost zero. At the
4-cell stage, the ratio falls into two groups, one
around 0-3 and another at 1. It is likely that a coupling
ratio of 1 is due to cytoplasmic bridges remaining
between sister cells at the end of the division.
Embryos at the 16- and 32-cell stages always had a
coupling ratio close to 1, although we chose to impale
only nonsister or nonadjacent pairs of cells.
The input resistances measured by each microelectrode in all cases are given in Table 2. At the 2-, 4- and
8-cell stages, the input resistances were 49MS2 ±32
(n = 26, ± S . D . ) ; at the 16 and 32-cell stages, they
were 32MQ ±25 (n = 18, ± S . D . ) .
Cell communication in early Ciona embryos
AB2
AB2
59
AB2
B4.1
b4.2
a4.2
Fig. 2. Micrographs of embryos injected with Lucifer Yellow. (A) 2-cell-stage embryo injected just after first cleavage.
(B) 2-cell-stage embryo injected at the end of the same stage. (C) Lateral view of a 4-cell-stage embryo injected in a A3
blastomere. (D-F) 8-cell-stage embryos injected in blastomere B4.1 (D,E, same embryo from different sides) and in
blastomere A4.1 (F), showing dye spread to the sister cell only. Scale bar, 50um.
The question then arises whether at early stages the
non-dye-permeant junctions are really gap junctions.
One physiological criterion for gap-junctional communication is its voltage dependence (Spray et al.
1981; Harris etal. 1981, 1983; White etal. 1982; Knier
et al. 1986). Therefore, we looked for a possible
voltage dependence of junctions in the early Ciona
embryo. When the coupling ratio was close to 1, no
rectification was observed in the voltage traces (see
for instance Fig. 1), suggesting that the nonjunctional
membrane did not have obvious rectifying properties.
However, in the cases where the coupling ratio was
small, a rectification was observed in the traces. Fig. 5
shows one example from a 4-cell-stage embryo with a
coupling ratio of 0-2 in one direction and 0-8 in the
other. Under these conditions, it was possible to
60
F. Serras, C. Baud, M. Moreau, P. Guerrier and J. A. M. van den Biggelaar
a5.4
a5.3
o
a5.3
/
)5.4
b5.4
b6.7
B6.4
B5.2
B5.2 B5.1
\
6
A5.2
A5.1
a6.8
a6.6
A5.1
a6.6
° v
b6.7
a6.8
a6.6
\
X
3 6.7-7^^^868
a6.5
'I
-
;
i
a6.8
b6.6
\N)6.7
56.4
£6"3
B6.3
/?tS5
b6.8
b6.6
Fig. 3. Photomicrographs of 16- and 32-cell-stage embryos, injected with Lucifer Yellow. (A) 16-cell-stage embryo
injected in cell a5.4; the dye spreads only to the sister cell a5-3. (B) 16-cell-stage embryo injected in B5.1 cell; the dye
spreads to cells B5.2, A5.1, A5.2 of the same embryonic half and to cell B5.1 of the other half. (C) This 32-cell embryo
has been injected in b5.4 at the 16-cell stage. The two sister cells are highly labelled, whereas little dye coupling to
neighbouring cells is detected in contrast to D-F. (D,E) Embryos injected at the 32-cell stage. The dye spread to all
neighbouring cells. These photomicrographs were taken lOmin after injection. (F) Embryo injected at the 32-cell stage
and photographed 5 min after injection. Dye spread to the cells of one half seems to be stronger. The injected cell is at
the border of the plane of bilateral symmetry. Scale bar, 50yon.
produce a large membrane potential difference between the two impaled cells. The upper trace is from
the injected cell, the lower trace is from the other cell.
The coupling changed within the 300 ms pulse from
0-2 to almost 0, when the voltage difference reached
about 30 mV. Since such a rectification was observed
only in the cases of small coupling ratio, this is a clear
indication that the junctions themselves are voltage
dependent.
Cell communication in early Ciona embryos
61
10i—
0-8
o
= 0-6
CO
c
"c. 0-4
U
0-2
I
I
4
8
16
Stage (number of cells)
32
300 ms
Fig. 4. Coupling ratios measured between 28 pairs of
cells plotted against the stage of development. For each
pair of cells, both coupling ratios are plotted, since they
may be slightly different.
Table 2. Electrical characteristics of pairs impaled
cells at different stages of development
Stage
Rl
(MQ)
R2
(MQ)
Cl
2
2
2
2
2
2
50
25
36
26
13
19
55
52
90
18
40
0-04
0-72
1-0
0-89
10
0-78
0-036
0-3
1-0
0-55
0-47
4
4
4
4
4
4
56
—
14
-
80
40
70
40
20
70
0-96
—
0-28
0-85
-
0-85
0-56
012
0-2
0-3
016
8
8
8
65
25
100
80
22
150
1-0
0-88
0-67
1-0
1-0
0-66
16
16
16
16
16
16
52
18
14
22
17
99
70
25
14
14
17
60
10
10
0-85
0-56
10
10
10
10
1-0
0-81
10
10
32
32
32
50
11
17
50
10
13
10
0-77
10
10
0-77
10
25
C2
Discussion
In most of the embryos studied so far, cells are
connected via gap junctions from early stages of
development (Caveney, 1985). However, after each
Fig. 5. Evidence for voltage dependence of the junctions
in a 4-cell-stage embryo. Upper trace: potential change in
the cell in which a 0-5 nA hyperpolarizing current is
injected; middle trace: potential change in the other cell.
Notice the difference in scale between the two traces.
Lower trace: current pulse. The current pulse produces
first an hyperpolarization of cell 1 of about 30 mV; cell 2
is hyperpolarized by only 10mV; consequently, a voltage
difference of about 20 mV is generated between the two
cells. Then, cell 1 hyperpolarizes more whereas cell 2
depolarizes, indicating the closure of the junction. At the
end of the pulse, the opposite effect can be observed: the
potential in cell 1 goes back to the resting level and when
the difference with cell 2 reaches 20 mV, the junction
reopens. During a short period of time the potential
spreads into cell 2, creating a little hump in the potential
of cell 2.
cleavage, pairs of sister cells are transiently coupled
by cytoplasmic bridges resulting from mitosis with
incomplete cleavage (Ducibella et al. 1975; Lo &
Gilula, 1979a). In Ciona also, cytoplasmic bridges
remain for up to approximately 10 min after cleavage,
as shown by spread of dye between sister cells.
Dye-coupling experiments showed that after complete cytokinesis there is no transfer between nonsister cells in the 2-, 4-, 8- and 16-cell-stage embryos.
However, extensive dye spread can be observed after
the beginning of the 32-cell stage. This indicates that a
striking change in cell communication occurs after the
fifth division and it is likely that at this stage,
junctional channels become capable of transferring
small molecules.
Electrophysiological experiments give additional
information about intercellular communication in
Ciona development. It has been reported that, at the
late blastula and gastrula stages in other ascidian
species, cells are highly coupled (Miyazaki etal. 191 A;
Takahashi & Yoshii, 1981; Merritt et al. 1986). We
found that, at early stages when no dye-coupling is
62
F. Serras, C. Baud, M. Moreau, P. Guerrier and J. A. M. van den Biggelaar
detectable, the blastomeres are already electrically
coupled. Our findings partially resemble the results
reported by Dale et al. (1982). We measured many
coupling ratios smaller than 1 at the earliest stages of
development, whereas Dale et al. (1982) did not
mention finding coupling ratios smaller than 1. This
discrepancy might be explained by the fact that they
were following the cell after each division and did not
consider the possibility of transient cytoplasmic
bridges; furthermore, they did not record ratios
between nonadjacent cells. Another reason might be
that they reported a higher input resistance than we
report here (200-500 MQ against 20-100 MQ).
Under their conditions, it is to be expected that
generally the coupling ratio will be higher. A possible
reason for their better electrical characteristics is that
they removed the follicle cells before impalement,
whereas we, in order to create the same conditions as
in our dye-injection experiments, did not remove the
follicle cells.
Our electrical measurements indicate that the
coupling ratio increases as development proceeds
from the 8-cell stage onwards. This is consistent with
the data from dye injection. However, since our
measurements were made in intact embryos, several
factors may contribute to this apparent increase in
coupling ratio with development. First, in an intact
embryo, the number of cells in contact increases at
each division, therefore the number of electrical
pathways between two cells increases. Second, part of
the coupling may be due to current flowing out of the
injected cell into an intercellular space and then to
ground via a relatively high electrical resistance.
Although in Ciona there does not seem to be an
identifiable blastocoele before the 32-cell stage, this
possibility cannot be ruled out. Another possibility is
that each junctional conductance between two cells
increases as development proceeds. At this point, we
do not know which of these possibilities contributes
most to the increase in ionic coupling between the 8and 32-cell stages.
Intercellular communication at the early stages of
Ciona development before dye coupling appears, is
probably mediated in part by junctional channels
because these junctions show voltage dependency as
described for gap junctions of other embryos. Thus,
taken together, data from dye-injection and electrical-coupling indicate that during development from
2- to 32-cell stage a transition of the junctions from
low to high conductance occurs. It remains to be
elucidated whether these changes of permeability in
the early development of Ciona are due to a quantitative increase of the number of junctional plaques or
to a qualitative change of the gap-junctional configuration.
The Ciona embryo differs from the mouse embryo
in that in the latter, ionic and dye coupling seem to
occur at the same time during the 8-cell stage (Lo &
Gilula, 1979a; McLachlin et al. 1983; Goodall &
Johnson, 1984). However, differences in dye diffusion rate indicate that there is a gradual increase of
the junctional conductance throughout compaction,
which may be due to an increase of the junctional
channels between cells as development proceeds
(McLachlin & Kidder, 1986). Therefore, it is possible
that, in both embryos, the same phenomenon takes
place, although in Ciona it extends from the 4-cell
stage to the 32-cell stage whereas it is limited to the 8cell stage in mouse.
We thank Dr D. Georges for her theoretical and practical
advice. F. Serras is a fellow of the Foundation for Fundamental Biological Research (BION), which is subsidized by
the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure
Research (ZWO).
References
CAVENEY, S. (1985). The role of gap junctions in
development. A. Rev. Physiol. 47, 319-335.
CONKLIN, E. G. (1905). The organization and cell lineage
of the ascidian egg. J. Acad. natn. Sci. (Philadelphia) 13,
1-119.
DALE, B., D E SANTIS, A., ORTOLANI, G., RASOTTO, M. &
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(Accepted 22 September 1987)